Aggressive cancer Chemotherapy or surgery to remove lymph nodes at the back of the abdomen. Stage 2 The cancer may or may not have grown outside the testicle but has spread to nearby lymph nodes.Stage 2 can have 3 different scenarios: ...
Operative removal of metastatic disease, usually after chemotherapy, is also highly effective and may be curative. Thus the importance of surgical treatment for testicular cancer should not be underestimated.doi:10.1007/978-1-84628-507-3_10W. F. Hendry...
Methods: Testicular cancer patients diagnosed between 2004 and 2015 from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database were selected for ... H Yu,B Feng,Y Zhang,... - 《Cancer Medicine》 被引量: 0发表: 2023年 Chapter 20. Surgery for Testicular Cancer Summary This chapter...
Follow-up of clinical stage I testicular cancer patients: Cost and risk benefit considerations - Editorial comment - Reply Kakehi Y, Kamoto T, Kawakita M et al (2002) Follow-up of clinical stage I testicular cancer patients: cost and risk benefit considerations. Int J ... Y Kakehi,T Kamo...
Surgery to remove the retroperitoneal lymph nodes, into which thetesticlesdrain, often is necessary fortesticularcancer patients. Doctors examinelymphtissue microscopically to help determine the stage of the disease. Also, removing the tissue helps control further cancer spread. ...
Surgery may be needed to remove your testicle. Lymph nodes that contain cancer may also be removed. Radiation therapy kills cancer cells and may stop the cancer from spreading with x-rays or gamma rays. Chemotherapy medicine is used to treat cancer by killing cancer cells. Chemotherapy may ...
Testicular cancer is more common in individuals with disorders of the male reproductive tract. It has been suggested that inappropriate exposure to estroge... TL Gaskell,LLL Robinson,NP Groome,... - 《J Clin Endocrinol Metab》 被引量: 209发表: 2003年 Gene expression profiling of rat spermatogo...
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In cases where the testis is non-viable, anorchidectomymay be warranted; prosthesis can be inserted at time of surgery or at a later date, at the patient request. *It recommends that if no torsion is identified during exploration, the testis should not be fixed, and the contralateral testis...
Patients with Stage 1 seminoma have a primary cancer that is limited to the testes and is curable in more than 95% of individuals. The primary treatment is surgical removal of the cancer by orchiectomy. Following surgery, patients may receive chemotherap